Showing posts with label BSC Mary Anne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BSC Mary Anne. Show all posts

2/1/23

Mary Anne's Bad Luck Mystery (GN#13)

Publication Date: 2023

Ghostwriter? No, the text copyright is for Ann M. Martin.

Illustrator: Cynthia Yuan Cheng

Synopsis:

The plot is, as expected, pretty much like the non-graphic version

My camera is behaving somewhat better; the colors aren't as weird as last month.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: Tootsie Rolls

One thing that seemed odd to me at first is how Dawn, the second-newest club resident of Stoneybrook (after Jessi), is the one who knows the legend of Old Man Hickory. It's the same in the original book, but there it's more established that Dawn loves ghost stories, so the readers can assume she'd been researching her new home.

Their Families: 

Tigger and Mary Anne's dad being startled when she falls out of her bed after tossing the chain letter:
The Pikes' "Daddy Stew" which looks awful as the description in the original book sounds:


The Club (and clients): 

Jacke Rodowsky spilling his mom's sewing supplies:

SMS:

Cokie and Grace in the cafeteria:

The SMS Halloween Hop:


PSA Time:

Fabric scissors are SO SHARP. Don't leave them out in the open or where little kids can easily get to them, and keep them closed and sheathed when you're not using them. It almost looks like Jackie uses the same scissors to cut the cardboard as he's making his robot costume--don't use fabric scissors for non-fabric things as it will dull the blades. Finally, related to sewing, Dawn was absolutely right to vacuum after the sewing notions spill. Little sharp things like pins are easy to miss.


Misc:

Martin dedicates this book to Aunt Martha and to the memory of her Uncle Lyman.

Yuan Cheng dedicates it to "Mom, who provided my foundation in both teaching kids and creating art. For Patrick, who would play the spooky Halloween soundtrack CD to scare me when we were little. To all the friends I've shared my Halloween adventures with over the years, I've been thinking of you fondly."

Book number THIRTEEN is the bad luck mystery!

The chain letter that starts it all:
The mustard seed necklace and accompanying threatening note:
Mary Anne and Logan in their Cats costumes:
Scaring Cokie, Grace, and their posse in the graveyard:




9/1/22

The Baby-sitters Club Netflix TV show: Mary Anne and the Great Romance

  Netflix has a new original series: The Baby-sitters Club! The second season and final covers eight books: Kristy and the SnobsClaudia and the New GirlStacey's EmergencyJessi and the SuperbratMary Anne and the Great RomanceDawn and the Wicked Stepsister (notice the title change?),  Claudia and the Sad Goodbye, and Kristy and the Baby Parade

The titular great romance in this book is actually Mary Anne and Logan, and while Richard confirms that he and Sharon are committed to each other, there's no wedding like in the original book. And here are some things I noticed:

What stood out as surprisingly (not necessarily good or bad) different to me:

Mary Anne and Logan don't officially become boyfriend and girlfriend until this episode. When they do, they're awkward and unsure of how to act around each other.


What I was happy stayed the same:

There's an allusion to the ghost of Ben Brewer.


Other interesting touches: 

I probably only notice this because I drive school buses, but the school bus here is specifically labeled "Stoneybrook Middle School" rather than being for the whole district, because a bus driver will usually drive students for a high school, a middle school/junior high, and an elementary school in the same day. Usually school buses are labeled by district (if the district has its own buses) or company (if the district contracts with an outside company).

Richard Spier has a speech prepared--with notes--for handling the inevitability of Mary Anne dating.

Logan is accidentally served a glass of wine (it makes sense in context) and Sharon quickly volunteers to take care of it for him.

Richard to Mary Anne: "Your friends love you in an almost an almost concerningly aggressive fashion."

3/1/21

The Baby-sitters Club Netflix TV Series: Mary Anne Saves the Day

 Netflix has a new original series: The Baby-sitters Club! The first season covers the first eight books plus a sort of adaptation of of the second super special, Baby-sitters Summer Vacation. AND...it's set in the present day (2019/2020), updated accordingly, and much more diverse. The plots are broadly the same as the original books. Here are some things that I noticed:

What stood out as surprisingly (not necessarily good or bad) different to me:

The impetuous that starts the fight is Mrs. Delvecchio (whose family replaces the Prezziosos) asking for Mary Anne specifically, because she knows Mary Anne's dad through work, and she trusts Mary Anne with her transgender daughter, Bailey. When Mary Anne vents to her dad, he calls the other parents, which makes everything worse.

Dawn's parents divorced when her father came out as gay. (She's handling it way better than two friends of mine whose parents split up for the same reason, but it sounds like in the Schafer's case, the reveal wasn't much of a surprise to anyone. With both of my friends, there were affairs involved.) Dawn's experiences with this help Mary Anne understand how Bailey feels. Mary Anne wasn't acting inappropriately, but she was privately confused and unsure if she was handling everything okay, and Dawn reassures her. This later helps Mary Anne tell the medical staff that Bailey's gender isn't what's on the medical chart.

Dawn is an only child.

Morbidda Destiny/Esme Porter is Dawn's mother's aunt, which is why Dawn's mom wanted to come back to Stoneybrook. She's into New Age stuff, which is why Karen thinks she's a pointy-hat green-faced variety of witch.


What I was happy stayed the same:

Dawn's introduction is fun to watch.

Richard Spier and Sharon Schafer meeting each other is pretty great, too. They realize who the other is when Dawn and Sharon (and Aunt Esme) come for Thanksgiving dinner.


Other interesting touches: 

Mary Anne's mom was a lawyer.

The actresses playing Mary Anne and Mimi are actually knitting, not just holding the needles and yarn.

Dawn sees a therapist, presumably to help her with the divorce and move, which seems like a great idea to me.

10/15/20

Logan Likes Mary Anne! (GN#8)

 Original Publication Date: 2019


Ghostwriter? No, the text copyright is for Ann M. Martin.

Illustrator: Gale Galligan

Synopsis:

One major difference between this and the original version: Jessi joins the club here! There's also more diversity in the graphic novel, notably Logan (and Cam Geary) isn't white. It also stood out to me that Mary Anne's dad didn't specify she could only get a rescue cat (although she still does), and that Mary Anne used magnets to put up the picture of Cam Geary on her locker, rather than chewing gum...not sure why that scene was so etched in my memory.

Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: She provides gummy worms, pretzels, and Goobers--hidden in a hollow book.
The Goobers were opened, hence Mallory's expression

Jessi's and Logan's first BSC meeting


Their Families:
My dad is also a lawyer. Replace the coat rack and plant
with more family pictures (we have a bigger family), the
baseball with a football, and shave the beard,
and this is him at his office.


Jessi and Mallory hanging out with Becca and Squirt

Tigger, shortly before Mary Anne adopts him


The Club (and clients): 

Myriah and Gabby Perkins

Jackie Rodowsky and his mom


SMS:
SMS hallway


Celebrity sighting in the lunchroom?

It's official! Jessi is the new junior member,
and Logan is the new alternate member.


That's Mr. Redmont, who gave Kristy the essay on decorum
after she was a little too eager to leave class in Kristy's Great Idea.

With Mallory joining earlier in the graphic novels,
we need a quick explanation of her being at the
emergency club meeting during eighth grade lunch.

Mary Anne's shoe hitting the vice principal


PSA Time: Surprise parties aren't for everyone! Scale the size of the surprise to fit the person.
Too much for Mary Anne

There we go


Misc:

Martin dedicates this book to "my old baby-sitters, Maura and Peggy."

Galligan dedicates it to "Patrick, and the full minute we spent laughing at the weird face Dipper made. And for you! I'm so glad we got to spend this time together."


The cities skirt!

10/18/16

Mary Anne Saves the Day (GN#3)

Original Publication Date: 2007

Ghostwriter? No, the text copyright is for Ann M. Martin.

Illustrator: Raina Telgemeier

Synopsis:

This graphic novel version of Mary Anne Saves the Day is faithful to the original book. Some fun additions are Mary Anne daydreaming of wowing her classmates with a new look, and a visualization of a nightmare that the other three members of the BSC make up and shut her out. The drawings that flesh out the fights, meeting Dawn, and other events are done very well.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: Ring Dings


Their Families:

It just occurred to me that Mary Anne and her father are shown praying before meals, one of the few times we see a character participating in a religious activity. And Mary Anne's father is fairly strict and controlling in the early books. Later religious characters are sometimes portrayed as straw men, like Merry Dow's censorship-crusading mother. I wonder if Martin has had some less-than-pleasant interaction with holier-than-thou types.

Richard Spier is illustrated with a beard. I've always pictured him clean-shaven, probably because my dad is a lawyer and doesn't have facial hair.

Mary Anne's internal dialogue says her mom died of cancer. Previous books had her dying of some sort of lingering illness, and cancer certainly fits the bill.

Mary Anne and her dad:



Dawn arranges a meeting for her mom and Mary Anne's dad (pretty much exactly how I pictured it):




The Club (and clients):

Mary Anne's handwriting:



Mr. Prezzioso tips Mary Anne and Dawn each $50 instead of $20.

Mary Anne with a sick Jenny:



The Pikes:



Dawn officially joins the club:




SMS:

The Shillaber twins are brunettes. There were three sets of twins in my class, a total of four girls and two boys. For some reason I've been associating the set of blonde-haired fraternal sisters with the Shillabers rather than the brown-haired identical sisters (the boys were also identical). I didn't realize that until I saw the drawing and the Shillaber twins weren't blonde.



PSA Time: Nothing stood out


Misc:

Martin dedicates this book to her "Beth McKeever Perkins, my old baby-sitting buddy. With Love (and years of memories)," and Telgemeier gives "thanks to David Saylor, Cassandra Pelham, Ellie Berger, Marion Vitus, Alisa Harris, Alison Wilgus, Zack Giallongo, Steve Flak, Phil Falco, Braden Lamb, and John Green. And of course, thanks to my husband, Dave Roman, for always encouraging me to do my best."

10/2/13

Mary Anne and the Brunettes (TV#1)

Netflix has the BSC television series! I don't consider the shows canon, but why not recap them? The show aired from 1990-1993 and had thirteen episodes. I've only seen two episodes ("Mary Anne and the Brunettes" and "Dawn and the Haunted House"). I had those two on VHS and watched them a lot as a kid. I thought the casting of Kristy was spot-on, and the other girls okay, although Mary Anne was way taller than I pictured her and Dawn's Boston accent confused me. But all the actors seemed to have a great time portraying the girls, and they certainly seemed to be doing their best. However, I could have done without the theme song.

The main cast:
Kristy Thomas: Avriel Hillman (1995 movie: Schuler Fisk)
Claudia Kishi: Jeni F. Winslow (1995 movie: Tricia Joe)
Stacey McGill: Jessica Prunell (1995 movie: Bre Blair)
Mary Anne Spier: Meghan Lahey (1995 movie: Rachel Leigh Cook)
Dawn Schafer: Melissa Chasse (1995 movie: Larisa Oleynik)
Mallory Pike: Meghan Andrews (1995 movie: Stacey Lynn Ramsower)
Jessi Ramsey: Nicolle Rochelle (1995 movie: Zelda Harris)
Logan Bruno: Eric Lawton (1995 movie: Austin O'Brien)
Shannon Kilbourne isn't in the TV show or the movie, and of course both were before Abby Stevenson's time.
Ghostwriter Jeanne Betancourt was also one of the writers for the show, with Ann M. Martin and Mary Pleshette Willis.

These will be pretty short...I'm going through them while I have not only a toddler and an infant needing attention, but also a husband who's recovering from a tonsillectomy. Plus there's work and all that, and each episode is only a half hour. For hilarious in-depth reviews, I recommend these at bsc-snark, especially the ones by 3_foot_6: http://bsc-snark.livejournal.com/tag/tv%20series

What happens:

The first episode revolves around Mary Anne worrying that she'll lose Logan to the Brunettes, a trio of girls (Marci, Patti, and Kathi; why it wasn't Cokie and her crowd I have no idea) the BSC has thus nicknamed because they basically act like Logan's groupies and are coincidentally all dark-haired. One of them bets the leader, Marci, that she can't steal Logan away from Mary Anne for the upcoming costume party. She starts flirting with him and getting his attention. Mary Anne insists that she trusts Logan, but the rest of the BSC is adamant that she needs to have Logan clarify what he's doing spending so much time with Marci. Mary Anne gets stressed out about the situation and snaps at Logan, sparking a brief spat while she's sitting for the Rodowsky boys. Jackie is the one who ends up encouraging Mary Anne to actually talk to Logan about what's going on, and while the BSC is defending Mary Anne's honor against the Brunettes, Mary Anne searches for Logan to sort things out. Logan explains that while he did like the attention, Mary Anne's the only one for him and he was only spending time with Marci because they're partners for a science project. Mary Anne apologizes for not  telling him what was going on, and he's actually pretty understanding and encouraging of her.


Things I noticed:

Kristy tries on a right-handed glove instead of one for a left-handed person, while Logan tries on a left-handed glove. Seconds later, Kristy bats right-handed. (She's supposed to be right-handed, while Logan's dominant hand was never mentioned)

Mary Anne wants pierced ears in this show.

Logan's hair is so nineties! His haircut looks like the style of the guys in my middle school classes. Speaking of nineties, Mary Anne wears culottes.

The girls have HUGE bedrooms.

This episode takes place after Mary Anne and Dawn become stepsisters. Shannon's not mentioned. I wonder if she will be later.

Kristy and Mary Anne do something in the show that has always annoyed me: calling a woman Miss LastName when she's clearly Mrs. (Logan's mom and Mrs. Rodowsky here). They don't sound like they're saying Ms., which would have been fine with me. People in my high school starting doing that randomly during senior year, to teachers they'd been calling Mrs. previously. It made me especially twitchy when they started doing it with our English teacher, who had been widowed years before. It struck me as so lazy and disrespectful, since the teachers in question had introduced themselves to us as Mrs. LastName. Okay, rant over.

Random clients not appearing in the books: Emma, Zoey

Special guest stars: Jonathan Davis as Archie Rodowsky, Mathew Donofree as Jamie Newton, Noah Fleiss as Andrew Brewer, Eric Gaffan as Shea Rodowsky, Jamie Mills as Pattie, Randi Moll as Marci, Danny Tamberilli as Jackie Rodowsky, Grace Francies Vella as Jennie, Jessica Zoel as Kathi,

(Speaking of Avriel Hillman, she's battling avascular necrosis, and raising money for an adult stem cell transplant. Adult stem cells are not associated with the controversy that embryonic stem cells are; bone marrow transplant is a type of adult stem cell transplant. For information or to donate, visit this page: https://www.giveforward.com/fundraiser/j1v1/cureavnfoundation?utm_source=giveforward&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=update&hid=2623197&cid=1851141 The fundraiser goes until the first week of December 2013.)

9/12/13

Mary Anne

Books narrated: 31

#4 Mary Anne Saves the Day (no ghostwriter)
#10 Logan Likes Mary Anne!
 (no ghostwriter)
#17 Mary Anne’s Bad Luck Mystery
 (no ghostwriter) my favorite Mary Anne book
#25 Mary Anne and the Search for Tigger
 (no ghostwriter)
#30 Mary Anne and the Great Romance
  (no ghostwriter)
#34 Mary Anne and Too Many Boys (ghostwriter: Mary Lou Kennedy)
#41 Mary Anne vs. Logan
 (no ghostwriter)
#46 Mary Anne Misses Logan
 (no ghostwriter)
#52 Mary Anne +2 Many Babies
 (no ghostwriter)
#60 Mary Anne’s Makeover
 (gw: Peter Lerangis)
#66 Maid Mary Anne
 (gw: Nola Thacker)
#73 Mary Anne and Miss Priss
 (gw: Jahnna Beecham/Malcolm Hillgartner)
#79 Mary Anne Breaks the Rules
 (gw: Peter Lerangis)
#86 Mary Anne and Camp BSC
 (gw: Nola Thacker)
#93 Mary Anne and the Memory Garden
 (gw: Jahnna Beecham/Malcolm Hillgartner)
#102 Mary Anne and the Little Princess
 (gw: Peter Lerangis)
#109 Mary Anne to the Rescue
 (gw: Peter Lerangis)
#114 The Secret Life of Mary Anne Spier
 (gw: Suzanne Weyn)
#121 Mary Anne and the Playground Fight
 (gw: Diane Molleson)
#125 Mary Anne in the Middle
 (gw: Suzanne Weyn)
#131 The Fire at Mary Anne’s House
 (gw: Ellen Miles)

M#5 Mary Anne and the Secret in the Attic (gw: Ellen Miles) my favorite Mary Anne mystery
M#13 Mary Anne and the Library Mystery
 (gw: Ellen Miles)
M#20 Mary Anne and the Zoo Mystery
 (gw: Jahnna Beecham/Malcolm Hillgartner)
M#24 Mary Anne and the Silent Witness
 (gw: Ellen Miles)
M#31 Mary Anne and the Music Box Mystery
 (gw: Ellen Miles)
M#34 Mary Anne and the Haunted Bookstore
 (gw: Vicki Berger Erwin)

Mary Anne’s Book (gw: Jeanne Betancourt)

FF#3 Mary Anne’s Big Breakup (gw: Suzanne Weyn)
FF#8 Mary Anne’s Revenge
 (gw: Nola Thacker) my favorite Mary Anne FF
FF#11 Welcome Home, Mary Anne (gw: Ellen Miles)

Portrayed by Megan Lahey in the TV show and Rachel Leigh Cook in the movie. The TV episode "Mary Anne and the Brunettes" is centered around her.

Mary Anne’s Crushes-2 (tied for sixth with Kristy)
Alex, Logan Bruno (she dates Logan from #10 Logan Likes Mary Anne! to FF#3 Mary Anne’s Big Breakup with a break spanning #41 Mary Anne vs. Logan to #46 Mary Anne Misses Logan)

Mary Anne loves New York.

Mary Anne takes French class at SMS.

Mary Anne bites her nails.

In #31 Dawn’s Wicked Stepsister, Dawn and Mary Anne trade clothes back and forth. But by SS#10 Here Come the Bridesmaids! they wear clothes of completely different sizes. Until a growth spurt mentioned in #19 Claudia and the Bad Joke, Mary Anne is the second shortest student in her grade.

Mary Anne still dresses up her stuffed animals, according to Claudia’s narration in #2 Claudia and the Phantom Phone Calls. However, in The Summer Before Mary Anne is only interested in making some clothes for a set of dolls that belonged to her mother, so Claudia might have mistaken.

Mary Anne learned to knit from Mimi. She later teaches Claudia to knit.

Mary Anne and Logan say “I love you” to each other in Snowbound! Seems pretty serious for a middle school relationship, but I didn't date until high school. (I was allowed to as far as I know; I was just never asked out until I was almost 17. Made up for lost time by meeting a guy the first day of college and marrying him before starting senior year of college.)

Mary Anne wears reading glasses. Mary Anne got contact lenses to replace her reading glasses in #5 Dawn and the Impossible Three (her dad gets contacts in the same book). Now, I'm nearsighted enough that it's easier for me to read books without corrective lenses, so I could be wrong, but it seems like that would be more of hassle than glasses if she only needs them for reading.

Mrs. Thomas has been like a mother to Mary Anne. They never seemed that overly close, though, especially when compared with Mary Anne’s relationship with Mimi. Maybe Mrs. Thomas was always the one Mary Anne felt she could ask about girl things or whatever but it's never shown.

Mary Anne wants to be a teacher when she grows up.

Mary Anne think Robin Williams is the funniest actor.

Mary Anne loves getting the mail. So do I!

Mary Anne occasionally attends church, presumably with Richard and maybe Sharon and Dawn, at a Presbyterian church. In #4 Mary Anne Saves the Day she and Richard say grace before eating, but #86 Mary Anne and Camp BSC shows that they no longer do so, which indicates they may have become less religious over time.

Mary Anne has brown eyes and brown hair. According to The Summer Before, Mary Anne had bangs to go along with her braids. 

She and Kristy have a similar face shape.

Depending on the book, Mary Anne either has no desire to ever pierce her ears (most common), resents not being allowed to, or as in the case of The Secret Life of Mary Anne Spier, has pierced ears.

After her father’s remarriage, Mary Anne was overwhelmed with a lot of things and saw a therapist several times. She never mentions it until the chain letter book in which she reveals a secret to Claudia. Claudia keeps Mary Anne’s secret very well, respecting her privacy as a good friend should. By Claudia and the Perfect Boy it seems Mary Anne is comfortable with telling the other BSC members. I really like that Mary Anne didn't have one big thing that set this off, because that seems more believable and, I think, gives a good message that sometimes you might feel off for no good reason and if you can't shake it, it's okay to get help despite not having a "good reason" for feeling down.

The Prezziosos, Pikes, Braddocks, and McGills apparently live close enough to Mary Anne to wake up from the fire and come over in the middle of the night to offer help and comfort. The Prezziosos, by the way, are really nice people. They lend Sharon their cell phone for a day to call insurance agents, family, and so on and they bring the family food and clothes while they’re outside in shock watching their house burn. In Stacey and the Missing Ring, the Prezziosos defend the BSC’s reputation when a new client accuses Stacey of stealing a diamond ring. For all the flack the BSC gives them, the Prezziosos, while a bit odd, are very sweet and loyal.

By the time of the Friends Forever series, Mary Anne and Dawn have grown apart. Mary Anne doesn’t think of Dawn as a best friend anymore.


Mary Anne’s Family

Mary Anne is an only child who lives her father, Richard. Her mother is deceased. Mary Anne also has a kitten named Tigger, adopted from a shelter in #10 Logan Likes Mary Anne! Her father rekindles a relationship with a high school sweetheart, who just happens to be Dawn Schafer’s mother Sharon, and they marry in #30 Mary Anne and the Great Romance. Mary Anne and her father move to the Schafer’s house in #31 Dawn’s Wicked Stepsister. Their house burns down in #131 The Fire at Mary Anne’s House and they renovate the barn, moving back to the property in FF#11 Welcome Home, Mary Anne.

It seems that Mary Anne’s mother was already ill when Mary Anne was born, or shortly became ill shortly after. Mary Anne was formula-fed, which I would assume had something to do with her mother’s health (but in the formula-centric BSC land, who knows). She was only 25 when she died. Mary Anne was six months old.

Mary Anne's mother was named Abigail in the older versions of the Mary Anne Saves the Day, but the newer ones are updated to have her named Alma. She also went to high school in Maryland...but Mary Anne's grandparents live in Iowa and clearly have for some time. The new cover version also says she grew up in MD.

Mary Anne’s mom played for her college basketball team.

Mary Anne’s mom is mentioned in the present tense in both Logan’s Story and Stacey’s Choice. In both instances it could mean Sharon, but Mary Anne doesn’t call Sharon her mom so it really reads like Alma is back from the dead.

Mary Anne’s mom was an excellent baker. Her maiden name was Baker, coincidentally.

Mary Anne's dad tries so hard to raise her well. Too bad he goes overboard, but you can tell he really has her best interests in mind. One understandable example: Mary Anne's room hasn't changed since she was three. I bet that has a lot to do with her dad putting up the stuff her mom had gotten for Mary Anne and not wanting to take them down.

Richard still uses the same watch he did as a child.

According #68 Dawn’s Big Move, Richard can imitate Goofy. He also rings the doorbell to his own house to get in. Twice. Hasn't Sharon given him a key yet? He doesn't seem the type to lose his key. In fact, I bet he’d be like my dad and keep a spare to both the house and his car in his wallet.

Mary Anne’s father won’t let her talk on the phone on school nights, from how Kristy describes it.

Richard likes jazz.

Richard knows how to braid, which indicates to me how hard he worked to raise Mary Anne alone. My first real understanding that boys and girls are different came when I asked my dad to braid my hair and he didn't know how.

Mary Anne’s dad marries Dawn’s mom after going on about thirty dates (thirty since reuniting after high school). Mary Anne’s dad dated other people before reconnecting with Sharon.

The Schafer-Spier house didn't have an adequate number of smoke detectors until Richard insisted.

Mary Anne's paternal grandfather was a mailman.

7/26/13

Welcome Home, Mary Anne! (FF#11)

Original Publication Date: 2000

Ghostwriter? Yes, Ellen Miles.

Synopsis:

The barn has been renovated into a house, and Mary Anne is about to move into it with her family. The last Mary Anne book suggested this would happen around January; it's now June. But that's realistic: it seems people often underestimate how long construction projects take. Dawn and Jeff are in town for this as well, and Dawn has brought Sunny with her to try to show Sunny a good time in a place that won't have upsetting memories of her mother.

The new house takes some getting used to. It doesn't feel like home yet. Jeff is especially unimpressed (the Pike boys end up helping him get excited about the new place, and Mary Anne helps him sort out his feelings of loss). Mary Anne is also out of sorts because she's unsure how to act around Sunny, who she has to admit seems to know Dawn better than Mary Anne does. To Sunny's credit, she does make an honest effort to enjoy Connecticut and not make Mary Anne feel like a third wheel. Sunny's exuberant personality is a bit much for Mary Anne to take at times, especially the boy-crazy side (she tries to find Mary Anne a new boyfriend even though Mary Anne's not ready for that yet). Dawn and Mary Anne surmise that Sunny is keeping busy to avoid thinking about her mother's death, and they try to keep up with her. Things come to a head during an excursion to New York City (without parental permission). They nearly get caught, and would have if Dawn hadn't finally pointed out to Sunny that she's taking advantage of how everyone walks on eggshells around her. They all go home not speaking, but once there Sunny opens up to Mary Anne, who helps her out. Before Sunny heads back to California, the Schafer-Spiers have a party that's part going away, part housewarming, complete with a BSC reunion. Sunny leaves on good terms with everyone, and Mary Anne and her family start to feel at home in their new house.

Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: none mentioned. Mary Anne does consider buying her a glass Hershey's kiss, but it's too expensive.

Mary Anne makes a joke by imitating a therapist, which is especially fitting as she's actually had therapy sessions.


Their Families:

Mary Anne's dad rides a bicycle, and is implied to do much of the maintenance on his own.

Margo seems to be the only one of the Pikes who enjoys vegetables. She and Claire knows how to sew, at least a little bit. I wonder if Mallory taught them.


The Club (and clients):

According to Mary Anne, the BSC no longer meets regularly.

Abby's an honorary BSC member.


SMS:

School's out for the summer, for the thirteenth time.


PSA Time:

Orangutans are not nice animals. There's a reason that the keepers at the zoo won't retrieve items dropped into their exhibit. Hold on to your camera tight.


Misc:

This is Mary Anne's last book.

Sunny's mom died on March 19, and this book is supposed to take place a few months later in June, but the last California diary took place in late summer with no mention of Sunny leaving with Dawn...is this the next year or the same year with a different story? My head hurts.

So, Sunny. She's supposed to have strawberry-blonde hair. It's mentioned in this book, and has been in others. But have any of the cover pictures ever show her that way?



The numbers:

Starting 8th grade: 12

Halloweens in 8th grade: 6 (plus one in seventh)

Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 5

Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate in the plot of a book, not just reference): Christmas-6, Hanukkah-2, Kwanzaa-3

Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 6

St. Patrick's Days in 8th grade: 1

Summers after 8th grade: 13

BSC Fights: 13

SMS Staff and Faculty: 69

Students (other than the BSC): 218: 123 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 31 7th graders, 48 6th graders, 16 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.

Clients: 38 families

Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 151

Crushes:
Stacey-13
Claudia-13
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-3
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-2
Abby-0

7/5/13

Mary Anne's Revenge (FF#8)

Original Publication Date: 2000

Ghostwriter? Yes, Nola Thacker.

Synopsis:

Mary Anne is still trying to figure out who she is on her own, rather than as defined by being this person's daughter or that person's friend or this group's member. She's also still have nightmares and intrusive thoughts about the fire (I hope she sees Dr. Reese, the therapist she's seen in the past!), and also feels like people overlook her because she's quiet, and expect that they can just make decisions for her. She takes advantage of being on the yearbook staff to distract herself, but Cokie doesn't make it easy, teasing her at every opportunity. Cokie even ruins the fun that Mary Anne's having with elections for "Most Likely to..." categories by starting a rumor that Mary Anne has been desperately begging Logan to take her back. Plus she fixes the elections to win a bunch of categories (the staff catches on and has a revote). It's time for revenge. And who better to help than Cary Retlin?

With the help of Cary and the BSC, Mary Anne has some ideas for Cokie just in time for a big party Cokie's throwing. She has to sneak out to go after she ends up grounded after a fight with her father (she thinks he's being overprotective; he thinks she's being moody and irresponsible). However, she ends up not using any of the plans, and calls Cokie out on how awful she's been instead. She reads Cokie the riot act, and it shuts her down, especially when the rest of the partygoers applaud Mary Anne for standing up to Cokie, which gives her continued resolve to be able to stand up for herself in the future. Mary Anne returns home to find her father waiting in the kitchen, and they restart their earlier fight, which Sharon puts a halt to by making them realize that they're both still tense because of the fire. They've both been walking on eggshells around each other because they don't want to upset the other, and that ended up making things worse. With that out in the open, Mary Anne and her dad make up.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: none mentioned

According to Mary Anne, Kristy "charges through life like a soccer fullback." Okay then. Fullback is a defensive position; I think Mary Anne meant striker, because while defense does have to be tough, the image Mary Anne seems to be trying to present is someone rushing through the ranks to score a goal. But Mary Anne isn't really into sports, so it's reasonable for her sort of confuse terms. Not sure why she'd ever actually make that analogy though.

Logan's sort of going out with Dorianne Wallingford.

Claudia has different lucky colors on different days.

By the end of the book, Mary Anne and Logan aren't tight friends, but they don't avoid each other either.


Their Families:

This book presents the fact that Richard likes to organize his book by category and then in alphabetical order as proof of his extreme neatness. If you have a lot of books, doesn't it just make sense to organize so you can find them? We have four bookshelves, with children's books (in my daughters' room), fiction, humor, reference, and non-fiction; plus the cookbooks in the kitchen, a basket of board books for the girls, and then some books on the shelf under the coffee table: the family Bible and some field guides so we can figure out what bird is at the feeder.


The Club (and clients): nothing new.


SMS:

Cokie Mason is a yearbook editor. Not just on the staff, but an editor. That's a HUGE responsibility, and usually comes with a minimum GPA requirement.

Mr. Fiske, formerly introduced as an English teacher, is also the yearbook advisor. Smaller chance of typos that way, I bet.

Some of the winners for the different categories: Claudia is best artist, Logan and Abby are best male and female athletes, respectively, Cary Retlin and Alan Gray tie for wittiest, Emily Bernstein wins both most likely to succeed and most intelligent, Kristy is most likely to be elected President, and Stacey is most likely to be seen in Beverly Hills. Mary Anne doesn't win anything nor did she expect to. Cokie also doesn't win anything.


PSA Time:

While musing about how to get back at Cokie, Mary Anne considers slipping her a laxative. NO. You NEVER sneak a person unneeded medicine, and only sneak needed medicine under the advice of a medical professional (like crushing up a pill in a kid's applesauce). What about allergies, or other medications the person might be taking, or the adverse side affects of a medication? Just NO. You don't trick people into ingesting things (again, exception for situations like grating a carrot in a kid's spaghetti sauce).


Misc:

Mary Anne wonders whether cats have nightmares. I'll admit I'm curious too. I think it's possible; I've seen both cats here twitching like they're dreaming, and sometimes they growl. Speaking of the cats, yesterday was the older one's birthday. Eddie (short for Edgrrr) is 13 now.



The numbers:

Starting 8th grade: 12

Halloweens in 8th grade: 6 (plus one in seventh)

Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 5

Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate in the plot of a book, not just reference): Christmas-6, Hanukkah-2, Kwanzaa-3

Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 6

St. Patrick's Days in 8th grade: 1

Summers after 8th grade: 12

BSC Fights: 13

SMS Staff and Faculty: 69

Students (other than the BSC): 218: 123 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 31 7th graders, 48 6th graders, 16 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.

Clients: 38 families

Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 151

Crushes:
Stacey-13
Claudia-13
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-3
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-2
Abby-0

6/7/13

Mary Anne's Big Breakup (FF#3)

Original Publication Date: 1999

Ghostwriter? Yes, Suzanne Weyn.

Synopsis:

Mary Anne finally does it: she breaks up with Logan for real. She'd felt smothered by him, and defined by her relationship with him, thinking of herself as MaryAnneAndLogan instead of Mary Anne. Her friends and family are mostly supportive. Some are surprised since Mary Anne had been dating Logan so long, but others, like Dawn and Richard, note that Mary Anne's changed a lot lately and that she'd been less enthusiastic about Logan recently. Logan's brother and sister are less understanding, although Mary Anne is able to explain to them that she doesn't hate Logan and would like to be friends with him at some point. Some people who are more Logan's friends, like his sports teammates, seem to resent Mary Anne. Some other guys start asking Mary Anne out! (Stacey wants to set Mary Anne up with a new beau right away, too.) She's not ready to date again yet, but is flattered.

Kristy is a bit put out by everything, probably because it's yet another thing changing. She's also torn because she's friends with Logan as well as Mary Anne, and is trying to be nice to both of them. Mary Anne and Kristy have a brief fight when Mary Anne thinks Kristy isn't on her side, but Kristy is just trying not be on any side, and also confused about why Mary Anne broke up with Logan in the first place. Mary Anne realizes that Kristy isn't trying to do anything rotten, and Kristy accepts that while she might not understand Mary Anne's reasoning, Mary Anne did what she had to do.

One night, Logan calls and offers to have Mary Anne watch a movie he's rented, as friends. They have an awkward but okay time, which prompts Logan to wonder why they can't be dating again. Mary Anne remains firm, and after talking with Dawn and Claudia, realizes that she's not sure who she is without her relationships: without her dad, without the BSC, without Logan, who is Mary Anne? Now that she has the opportunity to be on her own a bit, she's excited to find out.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: Pringles and Cracker Jacks in her dresser drawer, potato chips

On the cover, Mary Anne is holding a letter from Logan. You can see parts of it in Logan's blocky, all caps writing and what I can read of it (backward, and around Mary Anne's hand and the book title) is:
"Dear Mary Anne,
I don't know how to say all the things I want to say. We've been through so much together--from the very first moment I saw you, I knew that you would be a gigantic part of my life and you have been. But now I'm not so sure about where we're going. I...you but somehow I...confused....have...spend a...time apart. I hope...understand--I...will (I..."

Claudia helps Mary Anne talk things out right after the break up, and is very sweet to Mary Anne. It's implied that she understands having to face when a relationship isn't working out because of her experience with Josh Rocker. Janine offers sympathy too.

Foul: Mary Anne did NOT meet Logan when she was still required to wear her hair in braids. She got permission to do her hair differently in seventh grade, and met Logan the first time through eighth grade.

Mary Anne doesn't consider Dawn to be one of her best friends anymore. The distance between them has grown to be more than just physical.

Apparently Mary Anne is like me in that she doesn't always run a fever when she's sick. My brothers and I rarely run fevers, and my normal temperature is actually low: 96.5 F.

Mary Anne and Logan think that Robin Williams is the funniest actor.


Their Families:

Mary Anne's family gets the plans for turning the barn into a house approved, and work gets started. The contractor says that with good weather, it might be ready by the new year, which is in about three or four months. That seems unlikely to me...

Kristy helps her family bake a lot of apple pies and pumpkin pies to donate to a homeless shelter. Good idea, provided they've cleared it with the shelter first. Some places probably can't accept home-made goods for liability reasons.


The Club (and clients):

Sort of a more relaxed BSC. The meetings are still as frequent, but Kristy's more relaxed about being on time. Not a lot, though; the meetings are still only 30 minutes long so ten minutes would be a significant chunk of the meeting to miss.


SMS:

Let's assume SMS finishes school between 2:30 and 3:00, which is about right for a middle school. Mary Anne notes that Logan's football practice won't keep him from getting home before 6:00. That seems a little short for football practice. It would probably start a half or so after classes are done for the day, and have a decently long warm up, then a couple hours of actual practice and a cool down, then he'd have to change out of his gear and then walk back home carrying his stuff. That should easily eat up three hours.


PSA Time:

Mary Anne realizes something important: a couple shouldn't be 100% added together. The two members should aim for 100% individually, because if you're only complete when both of you are at the top of your game, what happens when one of you gets sick or loses a job or is going through something difficult?


Misc:

I remember finding a copy of this in a used bookstore when I was in high school, flipping through it, and being horrified that Mary Anne and Logan were officially over. I put the book back on the shelf without buying it (I had stopped reading BSC books around the time the regular series numbered in the 90s).



The numbers:

Starting 8th grade: 12

Halloweens in 8th grade: 6 (plus one in seventh)

Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 4

Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate in the plot of a book, not just reference): Christmas-5, Hanukkah-2, Kwanzaa-3

Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 5

St. Patrick's Days in 8th grade: 1

Summers after 8th grade: 12

BSC Fights: 13

SMS Staff and Faculty: 68

Students (other than the BSC): 215: 121 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 30 7th graders, 48 6th graders, 16 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.

Clients: 38 families

Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 149

Crushes:
Stacey-13
Claudia-12
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-2
Abby-0

5/21/13

The Fire at Mary Anne's House (RS#131)

Original Publication Date: 1999

Ghostwriter? Yes, Ellen Miles. I'm a little disappointed there's a ghost writer for the last book of the series.

Synopsis:

The BSC decides to enter itself into a Best Sitter contest sponsored by a teen magazine. This allows them to reminisce about a lot of the adventures they've had. This plot hums along merrily until the main one comes along: Mary Anne wakes up to Tigger panicking and her dad calling for her as their house burns around them. Mary Anne, Richard, Sharon, and Tigger make it out safely, but the house is completely destroyed. (Dawn and Jeff were in California at the time; Dawn flies to Connecticut as soon as she can after hearing the news.)

The town rallies around Mary Anne's family, who will stay with Kristy's family for at least the meantime. While Mary Anne is grateful no one was hurt, it's so much to take in with everything being destroyed (like her mother's things). She feels mostly just numb, probably from such an overwhelming experience. She doesn't cry during the fire or when she's picking through the charred remains of the house, which confuses her a bit, and she's been having nightmares. Logan wisely suggests she consider talking to Dr. Reese, the therapist she's seen in the past. But Mary Anne just wants to be left alone, a difficult thing in Kristy's house. Further complicating things, Richard was recently offered a job in Philadelphia, and he and Sharon are thinking maybe they should just start over. Finally, one night Mary Anne can't sleep, and rides Kristy's bike over to the burned house, where she finally grieves for what happened. Dawn, who had followed, helps Mary Anne finally let out the emotions she didn't know she had.

The book--the series--ends without finding out if Mary Anne's family will move and without knowing who wins the best sitter contest.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: brownies and nachos (for Stacey) that she made herself, Twizzlers, Reese's peanut butter cups, Frookwiches

I disagree, Mary Anne. I'd be very surprised to see Abby in the Olympics running the 100 yard dash. It's the 100 meter dash, and when the US still used the Imperial system for track and field, the race was the 110 yard dash. I know Mary Anne's not an athlete, but with Logan on the track team and US schools using the metric system for track races when this was written, I find it funny.


Their Families:

Tigger (you know Mary Anne considers him family) keeps jumping on the pages of the magazine Mary Anne's trying to read. This is very accurate cat behavior. If you put any sheet of paper on the ground and tell my husband's cat, "This is very important," he'll come sit on it. However, Tigger likes having his belly rubbed, which, in my admittedly limited experience with cats, I find odd.

Sharon works for a small accounting business.

Stacey's mom makes a stack of sandwiches for Mary Anner's family and the firefighters while the house burns. That's very thoughtful of her.

Again, David Michael is very sweet: he offers all his bubble bath to Mary Anne when she heads to take a shower after shoveling through the debris. He also helps Emily Michelle draw a picture and learn a song to cheer up Mary Anne's family.


The Club (and clients):

Mrs. Prezzioso lends Sharon and Richard her cell phone in the aftermath of the fire so they call the insurance agent and so on.


SMS:

It's summer again. Mallory's still at boarding school, though.


PSA Time:

There's good fire safety information in this book, like touching the back of your hand to a closed door to see if it's hot before opening it, staying low to the ground to avoid smoke, not dawdling to grab things (like Mary Anne, I'd grab pets if they were in the room with me) as you escape the fire, regularly checking your smoke detectors, and continuing to move away from the fire itself until you're sure you're far enough from it.


Misc:

This is Mary Anne's last regular series book, and the last book period of the regular series.

The Prezziosos, Pikes, Braddocks, and McGills apparently live close enough to Mary Anne to wake up from the fire and come over in the middle of the night to offer help and comfort.



The numbers:

Starting 8th grade: 11

Halloweens in 8th grade: 6 (plus one in seventh)

Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 4

Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate in the plot of a book, not just reference): Christmas-5, Hanukkah-2, Kwanzaa-3

Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 5

St. Patrick's Days in 8th grade: 1

Summers after 8th grade: 12

BSC Fights: 13

SMS Staff and Faculty: 68

Students (other than the BSC): 213: 119 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 30 7th graders, 48 6th graders, 16 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.

Clients: 38 families

Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 149

Crushes:
Stacey-12
Claudia-11
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-2
Abby-0

4/24/13

Mary Anne in the Middle (RS#125)

Original Publication Date: 1998

Ghostwriter? Yes, Suzanne Weyn.

Synopsis:

This book is the one in which Mallory decides to attend a Massachusetts boarding school in response to the bullying at SMS and deals with the tensions between her and her friends, especially Jessi. For some reason, it's not told from Mallory's or Jessi's perspective, but Mary Anne's, because Mallory and Jessi have confided in her and she feels stuck in the middle of their argument. The main problem between Jessi and Mallory is that Jessi thinks Mallory is running away from her problems instead of trying to fix them (one point she has is that her family didn't run away from racism when they moved to Stoneybrook), while Mallory is upset that Jessi can't be happy for her to have been accepted--with a full scholarship--to an exclusive school. I'm willing to bet that part of Jessi is upset because if Mallory was going to up and leave for a boarding school, why did Jessi bother coming back from Dance New York? I can see why Jessi would feel hurt and abandoned, but she majorly crosses a line when she gets Mallory's siblings worked up about her leaving and turns them against her. Which honestly makes the scene in which Jessi's dance friends are excited for Mallory pretty funny. Mary Anne isn't laughing though; she's tired of being complained to all the time. She finally gets Jessi and Mallory to talk to each other and make up, just in time for the send-off party the BSC had arranged for Mallory.

Subplot: the BSC and several charges make new holiday decorations for the nursing home in which Mallory's great-uncle lives.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: none mentioned

Abby complains briefly that BSC members should be allowed to have lives when Kristy angsts about a party meaning all the members will be unavailable. Potential foreshadowing for the first Friends Forever superspecial?


Their Families:

Mrs. Pike is still temping and has a job over the holiday season.

Boo-Boo the cat is no more. There's a new kitten named Pumpkin in his place, a plot I understand is covered in a Little Sister book.

Mary Anne describes the Schafer diet well: they're basically vegetarian, which is pretty accurate considering how often we've seen Dawn eat chicken or Sharon be fine with picking meat out of or off something. So it's more that they prefer to not eat meat rather than never eating meat.


The Club (and clients):

The BSC elects to not replace Mallory, as they can't think of anyone good enough.


SMS:

Although Mallory will be attending Riverside after the winter holiday break, my running total for SMS students will stay the same because it doesn't include the BSC.


PSA Time: nothing stood out.


Misc:

This book takes place in December and there are some holiday preparations happening, but none actually celebrated.

It strikes me as funny that the director of the nursing home describes some decorations as so ancient that, at thirty years old, they should be tossed. Because pretty much all of the residences are going to be at least twice that age! Of course I realize that people aren't things, but it's pretty funny to me all the same.


The numbers:

Starting 8th grade: 11

Halloweens in 8th grade: 6 (plus one in seventh)

Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 4

Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate in the plot of a book, not just reference): Christmas-5, Hanukkah-2, Kwanzaa-3

Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 4

St. Patrick's Days in 8th grade: 1

Summers after 8th grade: 11

BSC Fights: 12

SMS Staff and Faculty: 67

Students (other than the BSC): 216: 122 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 30 7th graders, 48 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.

Clients: 38 families

Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 143

Crushes:
Stacey-12
Claudia-11
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-2
Abby-0

3/27/13

Mary Anne and the Playground Fight (RS#121)

Original Publication Date: 1998

Ghostwriter? Yes, Dianne Molleson.

Synopsis:

Summer break is coming up, and that means another whirlwind trip sponsored by SMS. This time it's to London and Paris, a nine-day trip. Those nine days happen to fall in the middle of another summer event that catches the BSC's interest: working at a playground camp. A lot of the girls want to do both, despite the fact that they'd be missing a week of the camp, because they're the BSC and who wouldn't want them to work at the camp (which is a pretty entitled attitude). Add to that there's only six spots available, and a dozen other SMS students are also applying. Nine BSC members are applying; everyone but Shannon, because does Shannon even exist anymore? It's not long before they start sniping at each about who has a better chance or is more qualified, or whether those who want to go to Europe should be able to miss a week of work (Dawn, Mary Anne, and Logan have elected to stay in the USA for the summer). The eighth grade BSC members score job interviews, but Mary Anne and Dawn have legitmate concerns about whether the ones planning to do the Europe trip will be honest about their intentions. While they wait for the results of the interviews, they continue to steam at each other, and even start to reenact the fight they had at Jamie Newton's birthday party in Mary Anne Saves the Day at a goodbye party for Victoria Kent. They catch themselves before going too far, at least, and apologies are had all around. Then they find out who made the cut: Mary Anne, Dawn, Logan, and Claudia will be camp counselors. That leaves Kristy, Stacey, Abby, Jessi, and Mallory free to enjoy Europe.


Established or continued in this book:

The Girls (and Logan):

Claudia candy: M&Ms, Ring Dings, sour cream and onion potato chips, salt and vinegar potato chips, Cheeze Doodles, tortilla chips

Mary Anne says she "always looks forward to summer because that's when...Dawn visits." But their parents got married during the eighth grade school year, and Dawn moved back to California in the fall of eighth grade, so Mary Anne shouldn't know that Dawn always visits in the summer. And this is why having the BSC repeat the same year over and over and over gets fun.

Claudia's favorite potato chip flavor is sour cream and onion. That's tied with sour cream and cheddar cheese for me.

Shannon loves to wear red.

Dawn's room has hardwood flooring. It's not specified if the rest of the house does.

Claudia and Stacey go with Mary Anne, Richard, and Sharon to pick up Dawn and Jeff at the airport. They stop at Dawn's favorite restaurant (Cabbages and Kings) to eat on the way home. Mary Anne narrates that Claudia doesn't like a lot of the food there, but she's polite enough to not say anything. Pay attention, Dawn. Claudia is also very honest and forthright in her application for the summer camp, which I like.

Shannon will be at camp all summer.

Dawn seems to have gotten over her resentment of and forced emotional distance from her little sister. Good.

Kristy hates to cook even more than Mary Anne does.

Abby's allergic to tomatoes, cooked or raw. I know people who are only allergic to raw ones. Cooking them changes their chemical properties enough that these people can be fine with tomato soup or tomato sauce, but will get hives from raw ones. Incidentally, that same change that comes with cooking makes the nutrients in tomatoes more easily accessible to the human body, so cooked tomatoes are healthier than raw (until you add a bunch of junk to make a sauce). Same with carrots.


Their Families:

No, Mary Anne's father relaxes his rules for her in seventh grade, not eighth grade.

Abby's mom did her junior year of college in England.


The Club (and clients):

Victoria Kent is about to go back to England. For her remaining time, she wants to be called Vicki, which the BSC does a lot of eye-rolling over behind her back (they do at least act decently in person). Rude. It's hard to remember when a person wants to be called by a different name, but it's only respectful to listen to a person's wishes about what name is preferred. Forgetting is one thing, being dismissive is another.

Hey, in this book, Jessi and Mallory bring some food a meeting (fancy hummus platter in honor of Dawn's return). Claudia's hospitatlity skills are rubbing off on the other members. They also use it as their "Welcome Back, Dawn" present, which is smart because of how often the BSC ends up giving Dawn presents.

Mary Anne kisses Vicki goodbye after a sitting job. Maybe it's because I'm all about personal space, but I've never kissed a sitting charge, not even when I watched my then-infant goddaughter. If the kid wants a hug, sure, but a kiss is waaay too familar for me.


SMS:

Dawn has sent Mary Anne pictures of Gracie, who was born June 17. Mary Anne is still going to school after having received them. SMS goes late into June! I'm used to public schools being done about the middle of the third week of June (I went to private school, and we'd usually be out by June 10 or so; we had fewer days off during the school year).

Abby and Mary Anne still have the same math teacher, which is consistent with Abby's Lucky Thirteen, but take it at the same time, which is inconsistent with the same book.


PSA Time: nothing stood out.


Misc:

The lighthouse from the twenty-seventh mystery book makes a brief cameo.

Vicki Kent buys some movies to take back to England with her. I'm assuming they're VHS copies, not DVDs. Although one is Toy Story, so who knows. I know that DVDs from one region of the world won't always work in another; I wonder if she'll be able to watch her movies in Europe.


The numbers:

Starting 8th grade: 10

Halloweens in 8th grade: 6 (plus one in seventh)

Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 3

Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate in the plot of a book, not just reference): Christmas-5, Hanukkah-2, Kwanzaa-3

Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 4

St. Patrick's Days in 8th grade: 1

Summers after 8th grade: 11

BSC Fights: 12

SMS Staff and Faculty: 67

Students (other than the BSC): 214: 120 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 29 7th graders, 48 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.

Clients: 37 families

Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 141

Crushes:
Stacey-12
Claudia-11
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-1
Abby-0